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Mental Models of Cooperation: Why Prosocial Behavior is Typically (Mis)perceived as a Sign of Intelligence

Current theories suggest that actors who cooperate in one-shot interactions will comparatively be perceived as less intelligent; i.e., one-shot cooperation will be perceived as a sign of lower intelligence. We challenge this view. Integrating insights from conflict misperception and behavioral game theory, we propose that observers will heuristically think about one-shot cooperation like it is a coordination problem; one-shot cooperation (and prosocial behaviors that could be driven by one-shot cooperation tendencies) will be interpreted as an attempt to coordinate on win-win outcomes, which will be perceived as a sign of higher intelligence. We confirm our theory’s predictions across nine studies (n=4,401). For example, managers are more likely to hire workers for intelligence-based tasks if workers previously cooperated in one-shot interactions; surprisingly, workers who cooperate in one-shot interactions are not more intelligent in reality, highlighting the role of misperceptions. We rule out several alternative accounts (e.g., general halo effects, costly signaling).

Polly Kang
National University of Singapore (NUS) Business School
Singapore

David Daniels
National University of Singapore (NUS) Business School
Singapore

 


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